Friday, February 24, 2006

Another day, another nuggetty article, this time about ASP.Net user interface best practice - namely in providing a "Wait Timer" when a page has some long-running processing occurring on it.

Scott Guthrie must do nothing but blog all day (lucky beast! :) ) - in this post, he links to a very nice article by Daniel Fisher which includes the source code to a server control that lets you show a "Wait" graphic. To quote his reason for needing this functionality:

"Sometimes it happens that a form is processing and you need to make sure that the users don't panic and run away before it finishes."

Phil Winstanley pointed out in this blog entry that this kind of thing isn't necessarily applicable or suitable when a page is using AJAX for it's processing, and gives a number of reasons.

I still think that the simple elegant implementation of this control makes it a good one.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Here's another useful .Net 2.0 code library, which I found linked from this MSDN blog post by Scott Guthrie. It provides flexible, configurable RSS functionality for both consuming and generating RSS feeds.

Scott's posting provides a great step-by-step tutorial on the basics of using this, including screen shots - excellent work.

RSS syndication is becoming pretty much pervasive, so making supporting it this easy can only be a win.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

The MSDN Blogs are a treasure chest of information, and great for telling you when Microsoft releases new resources. One of their more interesting offerings are the MSDN Virtual Labs - online lab sessions that guide you through new technologies. I played with the VS2005 and BizTalk labs at the Launch event this year, and was reasonably impressed.

I'm starting this second blog as one that is much more focused on those technical nuggets of information that I come across and want to both keep and share with my peers.

I'm know going to be doing a lot of linking to the MSDN Blogs, but will also try and research the wi(l)der web for those hard to find nuggets of information, as well as posting my own thoughts on and solutions to technical problems.